Police are said to be investigating whether a porn filmmaker might have had a hand in the May disappearance of Alabama teen Natalee Holloway in Aruba.According to the latest scenario in the baffling case, someone may have been trying to talk the pretty 18-year-old honor student into appearing in an X-rated flick.

Aruba cops and the FBI are said to be looking to the porn world for leads.

Paul Barresi, a former adult-film producer who's now a private eye, says he heard about the possible inquiry from "another 'recruiter' who scouts South America for porn talent."

"Natalee would have been a perfect target - a naive girl from a small town," Barresi tells us. "The recruiter might tell her he wanted her to pose for some modeling test shots.

"The cops want to know whether [anyone] gave her a date-rape drug like GHB. Only, apparently, the plan went awry. She died," he theorizes, "and the porn guy may have had to get rid of her body."

Barresi believes the recruiter is likely to be "someone who lives out of a suitcase." The National Enquirer reports in its new issue that cops suspect he lives in Aruba.

The Enquirer's Rebecca Mowling and Don Gentile also report that one witness claims he saw three men dumping a body in a landfill site.

Police are said to be investigating whether a porn filmmaker might have had a hand in the May disappearance of Alabama teen Natalee Holloway in Aruba.According to the latest scenario in the baffling case, someone may have been trying to talk the pretty 18-year-old honor student into appearing in an X-rated flick.

Aruba cops and the FBI are said to be looking to the porn world for leads.

Paul Barresi, a former adult-film producer who's now a private eye, says he heard about the possible inquiry from "another 'recruiter' who scouts South America for porn talent."

"Natalee would have been a perfect target - a naive girl from a small town," Barresi tells us. "The recruiter might tell her he wanted her to pose for some modeling test shots.

"The cops want to know whether [anyone] gave her a date-rape drug like GHB. Only, apparently, the plan went awry. She died," he theorizes, "and the porn guy may have had to get rid of her body."

Barresi believes the recruiter is likely to be "someone who lives out of a suitcase." The National Enquirer reports in its new issue that cops suspect he lives in Aruba.

The Enquirer's Rebecca Mowling and Don Gentile also report that one witness claims he saw three men dumping a body in a landfill site.

Posted: Fri Jun 22, 2007 8:11 am Post subject: Evidently some of my fellow posters do not how dangerous being a witness can be,unless you have been there,well perhaps you should restrain yourselves from makiing dumb comments.http://forums.freep.com/viewtopic.php?p=202641

Police are said to be investigating whether a porn filmmaker might have had a hand in the May disappearance of Alabama teen Natalee Holloway in Aruba.According to the latest scenario in the baffling case, someone may have been trying to talk the pretty 18-year-old honor student into appearing in an X-rated flick.

Aruba cops and the FBI are said to be looking to the porn world for leads.

Paul Barresi, a former adult-film producer who's now a private eye, says he heard about the possible inquiry from "another 'recruiter' who scouts South America for porn talent."

"Natalee would have been a perfect target - a naive girl from a small town," Barresi tells us. "The recruiter might tell her he wanted her to pose for some modeling test shots.

"The cops want to know whether [anyone] gave her a date-rape drug like GHB. Only, apparently, the plan went awry. She died," he theorizes, "and the porn guy may have had to get rid of her body."

Barresi believes the recruiter is likely to be "someone who lives out of a suitcase." The National Enquirer reports in its new issue that cops suspect he lives in Aruba.

The Enquirer's Rebecca Mowling and Don Gentile also report that one witness claims he saw three men dumping a body in a landfill site.

Investigators in Aruba couldn't be reached for comment yesterday.

+++++++++++

******* I am glad you posted the above article. I had recalled reading it, but could no longer find it. I think for this to come up early in the case, even though speculative on the part of this Barresi guy, that there might be a grain of some truth. It may even be something like the 3 perps were procuring Natalee for the film purposes of Mr Pink and possibly protege Freddie before things went wrong for Natalee. Could PVDS have been the one who first targeted Natalee in the casino? ....and then sent the 3 perps to do his bidding? Hmmmmmmm

Logged

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Picture Gallery Builder (Nasty Dollars)How would you like to be able to have a batch of 100 galleries made for you in under 3 minutes? With our gallery builder you can choose from a number of templates and picture sets to make hundreds of galleries in a matter of minutes! Add that capability with our custom content and we are talking about a revolutionary concept...okay, maybe its just REALLY cool.

Posted: Fri Jun 22, 2007 8:11 am Post subject: Evidently some of my fellow posters do not how dangerous being a witness can be,unless you have been there,well perhaps you should restrain yourselves from makiing dumb comments.http://forums.freep.com/viewtopic.php?p=202641

After reading some of his other posts, doesn't sound like it is Brough, IMO...

Maybe you have a reason I'm not seeing to identify this person as him?

PET PHOTOS ON THE GO...Submitted by admin on Sun, 2007-04-29 09:25. PetClix handler/photographer Chris Kokuba of Clinton Township tries to pose Guppy the pug to mug for the camera inside the PetClix studio.

PetClix handler/photographer Chris Kokuba of Clinton Township tries to pose Guppy the pug to mug for the camera inside the PetClix studio.

Bubba, the chocolate Labrador from Grosse Pointe Farms, is coaxed to face the camera in the PetClix mobile photo studio last month. All kinds of animals -- from a trio of rats to a pot-bellied pig -- have posed there.

The Clinton Township-based PetClix mobile photo studio makes a stop in St. Clair Shores, as Annessa Scott of Grosse Pointe Farms arrives with her dog Bubba last month.

For information about upcoming visits by the traveling portrait studio PetClix, go to www.petclix.com or call 866-738-2549.

Paul Brough's business of photographing pets from a roving RV might be a bit unusual, but the way he came up with the idea for his animal-centered entrepreneurial endeavor is age-old.

Brough, a 35-year-old resident of Clinton Township and owner of a mobile pet photography studio called PetClix, was looking for someone to take a picture of his bulldog Diesel about five years ago when he realized "there had to be a better way."

Like so many other business owners, he set off on a mission to discover it. He researched the pet portrait market. He invested $150,000 and customized an RV inside and out as he formed the company two years ago.

"It was a big hassle to find someone to do the picture, and what I did find was not good quality," said Brough, who operates PetClix with fiancee Mala Greenberg, 32. They employ a staff of five.

They set up the colorful 32-foot RV outside pet-related businesses around metro Detroit.

The company is on the verge of expanding by buying a second trailer and hiring a second team of employees. But first, a team is headed out west this coming week for the summer. Hundreds of appointments in California, Washington and Oregon are already scheduled.

"If 10 years ago you were to take portraits of your pets and hang them in your home, you were a psychopath," Brough said. "Now it's almost unusual if you don't have pictures of your pet around the house."

Since Petclix began, about 1,000 customers -- the human ones -- have come through with creatures of all kinds.

Brough, Greenberg and their staff members have become accustomed to working with all sorts of animals and people.

From the typical dog and cat to the more unusual rat, pig or lizards, a variety of pets turn up for appointments, which usually last about 20 minutes -- pretty impressive considering animals aren't too good at sitting still and saying cheese.

It gets pretty interesting. There was the pot-bellied pig that required a ramp to get up to the table to pose. She wore a bow tied around her tail and posed in very regal setting on a red velvet chaise lounge. In another more fitting sitting, the pig stood in front of a white picket fence and bales of hay.

One little dog wore a $1,000 diamond necklace and carried a Coach-brand handbag that was accented by the dog's perfectly polished nails -- something that might have made toy-dog-toting Paris Hilton envious.

One of the most memorable clients was the owner of three rats, one of them hairless.

They were posed for a Christmas card, like three cuddly little pointy-nosed elves, inside a miniature sleigh.

In another scene, one of the beloved little rodents' twitchy little whiskers and beady eyes peeked over the lip of a bright orange bowl.

The owner loved the work so much she paid $320 for prints.

Some clients spend $20 or $30 while others spends hundreds, said Brough. An 8-by-10 at PetClix costs $26.

The Tepel family is pretty typical of PetClix customers, even if Harriet Tepel is a bit embarrassed to have already had her pug dog Guppy photographed twice. He's not yet 2.

He lives with the Tepel family in Grosse Pointe Farms and has been the subject -- along with the Tepel kids Beatrice 15, and Hans, 11 -- of Christmas pictures and most recently Easter pictures, which were taken a few weeks ago outside the Dapper Dogs dog wash in St. Clair Shores.

"I'm almost embarrassed about it, but it was so convenient and so easy," said Tepel, vice president of Tepel Brothers Printing in Troy. "I don't even have professional portraits of my children done. I always say I want to, but I never do.

"If they hadn't been right there outside, it never would have happened in a million years.," she said. "I thought, 'Hey, this is perfect. I get the kids and the dogs, all in one fell swoop.' "

The Tepels bought some wallet-sized photos and a CD of the entire sitting. The CD rotates as a screensaver on Harriet Tepel's computer.

There are clients, unlike the Tepels, who want framed, larger-than-life likenesses of their pets displayed at their homes and offices, Brough said.

PetClix operates from a customized, 32-foot-long RV that's painted on the outside with a comical, cartoonish scene of dogs, cats and mice at a beauty salon.

Inside are the usual accoutrements of a photography studio. It's a bit cramped, but there's room to stand upright and move easily with several people inside.

There is a table where the animals -- and oftentimes their human companions -- pose.

Hanging from a wall nearby are about 15 curtain-like backdrops. There are a beach scene, a furry pink rug that's popular for little dogs, Christmas backgrounds, a patriotic motif, plain muslin colors and sports themes among the choices.

There are bins full of all sorts of props, along with hats, bow ties and jackets in dog sizes. On the other end of the RV is the viewing room that's just been renovated to include a built-in, L-shaped leather seating area, where just-photographed images can be reviewed on a high-definition TV.

What sets his business apart, Brough said, is location. He brings the studio to pet-related businesses, sets up in the parking lot and waits for customers who have seen the event advertised at the place of business being visited by the eye-catching RV.

The studio primarily visits pet stores, veterinarian offices and groomers. It also participates in charity events and works with churches, giving part of the proceeds to those organizations.

The studio is undergoing other renovations in preparation for the cross-country trip to California. A bathroom is being added and other changes are being made to make the studio more comfortable for distance travel.

"This business is about to blow up," Brough said. "We're very excited."

http://www.alibaba.com/company/10233135.html#companyprofileCertified Enterprise SolutionsCertified Enterprise Solutions(CES) was established in 1998. Headquartered in Michigan, USA founded by Paul Brough. CES is a wholesale product distributor for several industries: Computers, toys, pets, and gifts.

I looking to rent my 4 bedroom, 2 living room, 1.5 bath home for either 6 months or 1 year. The house is a tri-level most rooms are fully furnished, all applicanes - almost all are brand new. The house has a fenced in back yard with a large deck with a huge hot tub. The school system is Chippewa Valley. There is a elementry school about 3.5 blocks from the house. I will introduce you to all the neighbors. Pets are welcomed. If you are also looking to rent to buy I would consider. First months rent and a security deposit equal value is required to move in.

41627 Westmeath at 18 and Garfield google map yahoo mapdogs are OK - wooof Location: clinton township it's NOT ok to contact this poster with services or other commercial interests

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